Here Alistair Davies and Alex Fortey from The Art of Simple Golf Share a golf swing drill that will shallow out your golf swing to improve your ball striking, angle of attack for more power in golf and improving accuracy with every club in the bag.

There are some key golf swing principles and golf swing path adjustments that you should use if longer drives and straighter shots off the tee are your golf especially. Here are the main points of this golf swing lesson.

With the drill that places a rubber tee peg on the arm the valuable visual aid helps you to exaggerate the movement and really feel the shallowing. So try this golf swing practice drill and you will have more consistency, distance and a good looking and feeling golf swing that you can repeat for contact.

These can all be accomplished by adjusting how steep you swing is from the top for this movement. It may feel strange at fist as we exaggerate it.

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Do You Know Why Most Golfers Are Struggling On The Links?

It’s because we’re desperately trying to “force” our body into unnatural positions to chase what we believe to be the “perfect” swing, chip, or putt…

Which in turn disconnects us from our natural senses of balance, timing, and movement – and leads to less effective performance, more injuries, and high levels of frustration.

In fact, any time you’re moving your body in an uncomfortable way, you’re drastically LIMITING the power, accuracy, and control you can exert over the ball.

Now, this might seem like a bad thing, but it’s actually really good news…

Because it means you have a HUGE amount of power, control, and accuracy in every swing just WAITING for you to “let it out.”

You see, when you “re-connect” to your instinctive golf senses, your game will drastically improve in just a few days.

You’ll start being able to pick and choose EXACTLY where you want the ball to go, even during heavy wind or adverse weather…

3 Comments

It’s a pity that you didn’t show precisely how the tee peg was taped to the arm. Was it laying on its side or pointing upwards. I have subscribed to your lessons and have to say that some of the videos that you produced in the past were of a very poor quality with road traffic and other noises obscuring you voice; very amateurish.
Please show a photo of just how the tee peg was taped to your arm as I am sure that other people had the same difficulty understanding what was required.
Regards,
Keith